Newspapers / The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, … / May 3, 1892, edition 1 / Page 2
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v f ... it 1 H The Bailg E-ening Visitor. CBLI8HKD YKhl AfTKRHOOB, I Except Si.nday, VISITOR isserved by carriers la the city nt 125 cents per month, payable to the carriers in advance. Prices for mailing: $3 per year, or 15 cents per month. No paper con tinned after expiration of the time p ltd for unless otherwise ordered. 3 lommunications appearing in these ejlumns are bnt the expressions of the opinion of the correspondent writing the same, and they alone are responsible. 3A cross mark X after your name Informs yon that your time is oat. :Address all orders and communlca tlons to BU76ROWN' & WILLIAMS, j-- Raleigh, N C QLocal notices in this paper will be Five Cents per line each insertion. L R!HT OTT CiBCO.ATION RALIIUH, MAY .'t, IHii'J NOT 80 BAD A3 PREDICTED When the cotton crop was found to be very short in all this section of country lat fall, there was more or less despondency broadcast among the farmers and the merchants back ing them. But when later on, the bottom dropped oat of prices, this despondency thickened into gloom and np and down the cotton slope of this and other Atlantic states, the fi nancial oatlook was dispiriting, and predictions of the most gloomy char ' acter as to the financial stringency impending was to be heard every where. Bat the inevitable must be met, and everybody seems to have determined to do the best that could be done, and now all are surprised that times are not harder. The finan eial rnin predicted has not been re alized, on the contrary business is better generally and has been, much of the winter than was expected. We asked a merchant on Fayetteville Street yesterday about business and he commenced in the old style chron ic way. " There is no trade, no mon ey and of course no business," but on questioning him a little closer, he stated that as a fact, his business is better than a year ago, that it has been better all spring than he last fall expected it would be, and then jocularly remarked, " it is fashiona ble to cry hard times when bills are presented." Uunfortunately for us, we had no bill against him. Wish we had. Be may, however,have thought wt were about drumming him for an ad. It is a very gratifying fact that business of almost all sorts is very much better than was anticipated, and there is a much more cheerful view of the financial condition of the country, present and prospective, than pervaded the public mind but fall and winter. What an amount of unrest we should avoid if we just would not look on the " dark side" so much. APRIL FULL MOON. The Wilmington Review says : Has the 'moon any efect on the weather ' You go and ask some of those people who have made it the business of their lives to study upon meteorology like cousin Chaff et , the Weather Observer here, and he will tell you that theoretically he does sot but that practically he does. At all events there are some strange co incidences. Ton will find it a rule that will scarcely vary once in life time that there is always pleasant spi ing weath er before the full moon in April and a cold snap just about the time that nils due. This cold snap is of more or less severity and hence Done of cur truckers and fruiterers feel satisfied nitil after the period f the full moor. If, after havirg suecesefully paese.i this period a few get rather full themselves in celebration of the fact do not judge them too harshly. And here are so in-- more coinci Jen ces. Jost yon note this summer aul Bfe if nearly all of the bad weather, "the wind find the rain and prob ibly the hail, does not c me in ou tli dark of the moor. Last year 1 8C0gir's graduate d from i be cooking schools of Bo-tn. Most of them can cook beans in teveral WANTED -LOTION FOR FAO TQRY. Parties with thorough knowledge of the furniture manufacturing busi Of 88 desire to locate a plant in some town of good location, who will sab scribe to capital sock of f 100,000 to the extent of 945,000, and donate a suita ble site of five acres to company. The above was handed us yesterday by one of our prominent mill proprie torp, Mr. W. B. Blades he having just clipped it from a trade journal. We have repeatedly urged the im poitance of a good furniture factory. We are well fitted for it, having ibuudance of choke woods, and our rivers and the creeks tiibutary to them furnish an easy means of access to the standing timber, and by raft ing the timber a cheap way of get: iug it to the factory, while our three Northern steamer lines, running on regular schedule, and our railroad, furni"h means of placing the products of the factory on good markets speed ily and at moderate cost. The advantage that such a factory would be to the city, giving employ ment, as it would, to numerous me chanics and causing the lumber to bring manifold more in cash from other places than when shipped away to be manufactured elsewhere, ate too manifest to dwell upon. Could the terms of the parties seek ing the location be met? There would be no trouble in getting the five acres of land donated. A choice of several very eligible sites would be gladly given, but it ould not be so easy to get $45,000 of the stock placed in the city. However, the company might posbibly be willing to make better terms than they offer in thir adver tisement, and if anyone feels suffi cient interest to investigate the mat ter we will furnish the address. It would be a grand thing to have $50, ( 00 of outside capital brought in for such a purpose, and to receive the de sirable addition to our population that would result from it. New Bern Journal. Would it not be a profitable thing for Raleigh to become interested in the above. Raleigh must have man ufacturiLg enterprises or suffer. earTyclosTng. The Charlotte News of Saturday says : "The early closing scheme that most of the Charlotte business houses adopt in the spring and summer will go into effect Monday evening. The following merchauts have attached their names to the list : - T. L Seigle & Co., B. Baruch & Bro , T L Alex anler. Son & Co , Racket Store, W Kaufman & Co , M. P. Pe-jra.ii, Jr , Pharr & Long, Rogers & Co The time for cloning will be 7 o'clock It is said that the -grand father, great grand father, and great great grand father of Ravachol, the Paris Anarchist, were all hanged for mu - ders pipetrated in attempting rob bery. His father probably died be fore he got a chance to be hanged Lookiug at his picture as it arv.ia irs in the prints there wis a mistake committed sunewuerd when he was not hanged long ago. With ancet- tors of this line, it seem he would naturally follow it up. Wilmington Star. That Tired Feeling Is a dangerous condition due directly to de pleted or impure blood. It should not be allowed to continue, as in its debility the system is especially liable to serious attacks of illness. It is remarkable how beneficial Hood's Sarsaparilla is in this enervating state. u ; Possessing just those ele nOOd S menta which the system SarsaPcl" needs and readily seizes, - this medicine purines the rilla blood, and imparts a feeling of serene strength which is comforting and satisfying. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the best remedy for that weakness which prevails at change of season, climate or life. "I have been convinced MflkfiQ that Hood's Sarsaparilla is one of the greatest medi- the Weak cines in the world. I say Strone" this for the benefit of all "W,,S other tired out, run down, hard-working women. Hood's Sarsaparilla is not only ex cellent as a blood purifier, but for all other female complaints, even if of long standing." Mas. M. A. Scablbtt, Northvllle P. O., fcpch. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by aU druggists. 1; six for $&. Prepared only Iy C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar ! JUnialusllia Claret On draught. fl.lG r gallon. Five gallrn krgs f5.ro each. Quart bottles 40c euch, or $7 30 per cate of 2 doten bottles. - VAItK4NTi;i ABSOLUTELY PURB. HIGHLY It FCft H -Mt.l)i:i) FOK MEDICINAL AXD DOMESTIC PURPOSES. An Excellent Table Wine Delivered at above rrices free of charge in the city f RnWg'i. Kegs and cases delivered at, any freight office in North Carolina, Mouth Caro lina or Virginia. Charges prepaid. A. DUCHl, Agent, ap4 lm Junalaska Wine Co , Raleigh, N. O. LITERARY. A&(i&?a'- DOMESTIC. , rumo to convince os that 701 vast sample oopy. Address Woman's Work, Athens, Gs, POETRY Original and of the highest character great variety. LITERATURE Pure, fascinating , Improving. FLORAL PAGE A gem of beanty and value. FANCY WORK A department that will pleas Mother's Corner A cosy place to rest and learn. Home physician The beat health department to be found. BOYS AND GIRLS A charming page for the yonng. COOKING Our special pride and the konaewue's speotal help. As a trampist the native born American seems to be a success, if that Hartford student, who has been taking observations, is to be credited. He says that out of 1,300 cases in vestigated 700 were native born Americans, and that only 10 per cent, of the entire Jot could read or write. But what use has a tramp for read ing and writing ? Wil. Star. The authorities of the town of Exeter, N. H.t are not uucompromis ingly opposed to whistling on general principles, but they draw the line on 4 Where Did lou Get That Hat." They consider this personal. They therefore fined a lot of students $5 a piece the other day for whistling it at a policeman who had just got in side of his nw uniform. That Brooklyn tailor who is in jail for marrying thirteen wives and was engaged to eleven other women must have been a captivating stitcher. If it takes nine tailors to make a man, what magnificent possibilities there would have been in this fellow if he had had the other eight ninths hitched on to him. A German writer on dogs acknow ledges the fact that he cannot satis factorily explain why a dog wags hit tail. We don't know so much abou' the German dog, but the generally accepted opinion in this country it that the American dog w,tgb his tail because the tail can't wag the dog. "Mothers Friend" wakes child birth easy. Colvtn, La., Dec. 2, 1886. My wife used MOTHER'S FRIEND before her third confinement, and says she would not be without it for hundreds of dollars. , DOCK MILLS, j Sent by express on receipt of price, $1,50 per bot tle. Book " To Mothers " mailed free. BRADF1ELD REGULATOR CO., 1 roH sals ay ALLOBUQOIT, ATLANTA, OA. SOUTHERN BAPTIST CONVEN TION, ATLANTA, GA. For above occasion the Richmond and Danville Railroad will sell re duced rte round trip tickets to At lanta, Ga., and return at' following rates (mm points named bel w ; in termediate points in same pioportion. Tickets on sale Miy 3d to 61 h inclu sive, limited returning May 17tb, 1892: AsheviUft, fS.PB Aohiw.pfi. $12.11 Charlotte, 8 I f'n't- .mi. 13 55 Hickorv, 9 60 H-n i r-.- 14 8V Goldsboro," H 0 ! -,.-'ol,.75 Raleigh, 14 40 n, . 1 4 !5rt Salietiurv, tin j ;;.. vilkio 20 Wilkesboro, 8" , ,,, 16V " fii-'ila" rtes, nm-. f .. r. f .r the round trip will "islv rr-n p'iit in Virtrit'ia ml Sun' 1 C hIhii i S 15. to 25(1. 00 nuts : 11 can b- made work TO WLUV.iru' fir -m P; -rns preierren wco can iurmsn a iicse and gne their wbole lime to the business S are nij roents may be profitably employ, d alto A few vacancies in towns and ci ies. R F . JOHNSON A CO, 20th and Main St, Ri h mood, Va. ap21,28niy5j QUERIES &. ANSWERS 44 Better than in any othev paper," says a recent lettet. CORRESPONDENCE A chatty page, full of experi ence and good suggestion. Other Departments 4 and Miscellaneous Matter, pleasing and valuable. woman's Work mast be sea to be appresistsdi RATES FOR,2i TH MAY CELEB RA TION, CHARLOTTE, W. C. For above occasion the Bichmoud and Danville Railroad will sell reduc ed rate round trip tickets to Char lotte, N. C, and return, at the fol lowing rates from points in same pro portion. Tickets on sale from all stations in North Carolina, May 18th, 19th and 20th. Limited May 23d, 1892 : From Individuals Military. Durham $4.30 8.5 Goldsboro 5.65 4.50 Greensboro 3.11 2. JO Henderson 5 ftO 8.95 Raleigh 4 70 8.75 Rural Aall 4.05 3 15 Selma 5.15 4.10 WinstonASalem 8 85 8.C0 Military rates apply to military companies, in uniform, 25 or more men all on one solid ticket. Remington Standard 'J'ype- ' RITERS.' More Remington's are used in Raleigh than all other makes combined. For catalogues or information, apply to the undersigned. WMEA8DALE, JBCULPKPER, Raleigh, N O- 1ltf Richmond, V JALEIGHA 9A8T0M R B. To take effect Sunday, Jan tftth, 1892 Trains moving North. n No 38, No 84, Stations. MrII train. Fas & Mail. Le Raleigh Raleigh. It 25 am 5 00 o va Wake, Franklinton, Kittrell, Henderson Littleton, 12 04 5 88 12 28 5 58 12 43 15 12 59 30 2 0" 7 85 po 2 45 lani Ar Weldon, Train moving South. No 41. No 45, fttattooB. Mail train. Past &Mail. Lb Weldon, 12 8" p m 7 00 a m 1 10 7 89 9 18 8 4? 2 34 8 F.9 i r,i 9 11 V 8 15 9 81 8 55 p m 10 15a rr Littleton, Henderson, Kittrell, Franklinton, Wake. r Raleigb. Tjouisbnrg Ra''road. Train" moHnrr North. No 89. Pass. No 8, f n1oTjs Mail & Express. Vranklint'n, 8 Opm 9 20am Ar Louiflbrirt?, g ',ri p ;". 9 55 Trains rnovlnc Poa h No 41 Pp.ss, No 9, Stations. Mali TCtprew. Le T,on'vTirf 11 8r-a 6 00pm Ar Franllnt'n, 12 05 r m 5 85pm . f SMITH, Supt, mm Cry for frteheft CM If Vou- Want Money, ' A cook, A partner, A situation, -A servant girl. To sell a farm, To sell a bxuse, To buy or sell stock, Good hoarding house To sell pants or grain. Sell groceries or drugs, Bell household furniture, To make any farm loans, 8ell or trade for anything Find customer for anvthing Read and advertise in the Raleigr EVENING VISITOR. Advertising obtains new.customers, Advertising keeps old customer". Ad vertising lioerUiy will pav. Advertising maks succeV. Adverting exhibits pluck, Ad verticil, g means "biz " Advertise immtdiatelv" Advertise coustautly' Ailvmh-e regularly, Advertle alwavs Advertise well ADVEKTItE, AT ONCE, NO W 11 The best thing In the United States lot ONE CEftT ' the Philadelphia RECOR0 $4 per year, daJ: $3 pr year, omitting Sunday. For the Farmers and busiuess maii the Record hau no equal. Address The Record." Philad. phia, Pa. Pa. The reat lNaiional rap The-Brightes. Best and Cheapest 5 THE WASHINGTON W EEKLY POST A. Paper from the National Capital should Go into every Family in tbe Country I IHKRKis 110 other paper in the Unite.' . estates that is growing so rapidly in circu' uition as the Washington Weekly Post This is because neither abor nor expense is spared to make it she beet, as well a th cheapest paper published. Jtia ' A National Paper I Ueing printed at che seat of governmentlhe Weekly Post contains special features nci found in any other publication. Every mac should first subscribe for his home paper 'To it you owe your lirst allegiance. After that is done, if able tt take another paper, the best one printed at the Capital of the coun try is the one that will, prove most profitable and entertaining. The Weekly Post will contain: A full resume of tht proceedings of Congress An epitome of all the news from the Nation' al Capital, Political news and irossip impartially told M Serials and short st'orjes by the best writers Gems of lirerature,ai t and selected miscellany The latest' telegrapic news from every section of the globe, Interesting Capita) chat, Interviews with leading men from &L rsrtt of the country, Other features not contintd in any other paper, The Post is an absolutely independent paper, 8 pages, 56 columns. The price of The Weekly Post is 75 cents per annum in advance. Sample copi sent trev Addre&e, Til F WEEKLY x'OST, . Washington Post. Caveats.andTri !eiMart'sobtaJned:sndsll Pit. ent Dusiness conducted tor sjodcsatc .Fees. Oim Office is ippositc U. S. Patent Office and we can secure patent in less time than Ibose remote from Wnshington. Send model, druwing or photo., with descrip tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. A Pamphlet, ' How to Obtain Patents," with cost of same In tue U. S. and foreign countries sent free. Address,. . . . c.A.srjow&co.j OPP. PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON. D. Has 0 ' - 3 " ' - '"
The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, N.C.)
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May 3, 1892, edition 1
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